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Traditional crafts holiday in Scotland, felt making

country:Scotland
location:Scottish Highlands 
departures:2010: 10 Jul
price:From £650 (8 days) excluding flights
more info:Price includes accommodation, transfers from and back to Inverness, meals and all workshops. Additional supplement for single rooms. Maximum group size of 6 persons
vouchers:Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday
 
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the amazing things you'll be doing
The Highlands offer so much in the way of traditional crafts and many of these ancient techniques were once part of everyday crofting life. We have developed this week to offer you a chance to learn about some of the Highlands most renowned crafts and have drawn inspiration from the stunning Highland scenery.

After meeting Hilda and her amazingly tame sheep last year, we thought how wonderful it would be to create a week which encompassed the whole process of felting from sheep to final product. Hilda shears her beautiful Shetland sheep using traditional hand shears and because her sheep are so tame it is much easier to see how it is done. After shearing on Hilda’s croft, we will walk locally in search of dye plants to naturally colour our fleeces, taking in some of the stunning scenery along the way. We will use some of the traditional methods and plants used by the dyers on Harris, including plants such as stinging nettles, bog myrtle, ragwort and mares tails, which all grow in abundance locally and most of which can be found in gardens and fields all over Britain. Finally, we will produce a felted piece of work using the wool you will have sheared, washed, dyed and carded. So you will have had a go at the entire process –from fleece to felt!

This week will give you an insight into traditional crofting (marginal Highland farming) life styles which have been going on for centuries. These ancient crofting techniques, many of which are still used today, require the farmer to make best use of all the relatively scant resources that are available. This means that little is wasted and it is a very sustainable way of living -a model to us all. We want to encourage people to get involved in the old crafts that enable crofters like Hilda to survive and help to ensure that old skills are not forgotten.

Traditional crafts:
  • Learning about hand shearing sheep
  • Foraging for plants for dying wool
  • Dying wool using natural plant dyes
  • Carding and felting

    Please note: This trip can also be run as a tailor made itinerary for families. See our Family activity holiday in Scotland
  • day-by-day itinerary
    Day 1:Arrive. Transfer from Inverness, 6pm. First night dinner at your holiday cottage. Exact programme will vary according to the weather.
    Day 2:Sheep shearing demonstration. After a morning walk around Leckmelm farm, we will head off to meet Hilda and her herd of mixed sheep and goats. After a finding out about the history of crofting, Hilda will demonstrate how she hand shears her sheep. After a picnic lunch on the croft, we will assist Hilda while she is shearing and collecting our fleeces. We will have supper back in the cottage.
    Day 3:Foraging. After breakfast we will walk from the farm, learning about and collecting plants for natural dying. Our circular walk will takes in the shore, woods and heath. After a picnic lunch along the way, we will spend the afternoon cleaning, washing and carding (separating the fibres using special brushes) our fleece ready for dying.
    Day 4:Plant dying. We will spend the day creating all sorts of beautiful natural colours from the dye plants we have collected, as well as adding a few household favourites like onion skins (which give such a wonderful golden colour). Our website gallery includes some of the colours we produced last year.
    Day 5:Exploring the North landscape. After breakfast we will travel north, taking in some of the region’s world-renowned geology and drawing inspiration from the dramatic landscape for our final piece. We will spend the day relaxing on one of the areas many stunning sandy beaches, walking along the shore, looking in rock pools and swimming in the sea!
    Day 6:Felting workshop. After breakfast, Rosie will run a felting workshop on the farm using the fleece you have helped to sheer, wash, card and dye. You can choose to make a felted wall hanging, picture, scarf or bag.
    Day 7:Felting and free time. After breakfast on the farm we will have a morning finishing off our felting and, those who wish to, can spend the afternoon pottering around the little fishing village of Ullapool. Our last night supper will be in the tipi, with folk tales being told around the fire.
    Day 8:Depart. Depart after breakfast for Inverness
    how this holiday makes a difference
    Everything we do is aimed at making a positive impact on the people who stay with us and on the people, places and communities that we introduce them to.

    Environment:
    Our Fleece to Felt week has drawn inspiration from the crofting community both past and present in Wester-Ross. Crofters are a true example of sustainability. Surviving on marginal land, making a living from what surrounds them.

    We believe passionately in protecting our local environment. We source local produce to cut down on food miles, either growing or sourcing our vegetables locally, our fish and seafood generally comes straight out of the Minch and our organic meat from the farmland around us. We carbon offset your journeys when you are with us and encourage you to do the same with your journeys up to us. The c-change trust is an ethical British carbon offsetting charity, which plants trees in Britain.

    We re-use and recycle all that we can, from paper in the office to fishing rope washed up on the beach. We compost all our food waste and recycle cardboard, aluminum and plastics. We try and minimize our energy use and encourage our guests to do the same. The Loch side cottages are fitted with under floor heating and are well insulated, reducing the amount of energy needed to heat them. The log fires in the cottages use wood from the estate. We use green, non chemical cleaning products and make sure we put no harmful chemicals into the water system. We use a tipi as an extra space, due to its low impact as we can remove it leaving no trace. We start as many of our walks as possible from the farm cutting down on emissions caused by the week.

    We are very aware of the natural unspoilt beauty of the area and endeavour to help keep it that way. On visits to the beach we carry a few bags so we can do a stint beach cleaning before leaving. We encourage clients to adopt the responsible tourist’s mantra of; “leave only foot prints, take only photographs”

    Community:
    As well as this Fleece to Felt trip, we are also running school felting workshops and community projects aimed at getting children and their families interested in traditional crafts and the idea of sustainability. Most of the fleeces in Wester-Ross (and the rest of Scotland) are used for very little. We want people to understand how wasteful this is, where in fact the fleece could be used in many craft practices and the lower grade fleece can be used as housing insulation.

    We are committed to using local services wherever possible, during the Fleece to Felt week we use the Lochside Cottages which are owned by, Lucy a local farmer. Virtually all the food we serve is locally produced and the experts involved live in the area.

    We generate employment and revenue for local people and businesses including crofters, farmers, market stall holders, fishermen, artists, craftsmen, cafes, restaurants and shops.

    Ross-shire is a sparsely populated area dominated by massive tract of mountainous wilderness. Our business helps to support and expand a regional network of like-minded individuals. We help to encourage cohesion and skill-sharing amongst craft practitioners and our other specialists.

    We hope that many of our guests will return to the area in the future.

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